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专题13完形填空夹叙夹议文(原题版)_03高考英语_2025年新高考资料_二轮复习_2025年高考英语二轮热点题型归纳与变式演练(新高考通用)340016860_第二部分语言运用

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专题13完形填空夹叙夹议文(原题版)_03高考英语_2025年新高考资料_二轮复习_2025年高考英语二轮热点题型归纳与变式演练(新高考通用)340016860_第二部分语言运用
专题13完形填空夹叙夹议文(原题版)_03高考英语_2025年新高考资料_二轮复习_2025年高考英语二轮热点题型归纳与变式演练(新高考通用)340016860_第二部分语言运用
专题13完形填空夹叙夹议文(原题版)_03高考英语_2025年新高考资料_二轮复习_2025年高考英语二轮热点题型归纳与变式演练(新高考通用)340016860_第二部分语言运用
专题13完形填空夹叙夹议文(原题版)_03高考英语_2025年新高考资料_二轮复习_2025年高考英语二轮热点题型归纳与变式演练(新高考通用)340016860_第二部分语言运用
专题13完形填空夹叙夹议文(原题版)_03高考英语_2025年新高考资料_二轮复习_2025年高考英语二轮热点题型归纳与变式演练(新高考通用)340016860_第二部分语言运用
专题13完形填空夹叙夹议文(原题版)_03高考英语_2025年新高考资料_二轮复习_2025年高考英语二轮热点题型归纳与变式演练(新高考通用)340016860_第二部分语言运用
专题13完形填空夹叙夹议文(原题版)_03高考英语_2025年新高考资料_二轮复习_2025年高考英语二轮热点题型归纳与变式演练(新高考通用)340016860_第二部分语言运用
专题13完形填空夹叙夹议文(原题版)_03高考英语_2025年新高考资料_二轮复习_2025年高考英语二轮热点题型归纳与变式演练(新高考通用)340016860_第二部分语言运用
专题13完形填空夹叙夹议文(原题版)_03高考英语_2025年新高考资料_二轮复习_2025年高考英语二轮热点题型归纳与变式演练(新高考通用)340016860_第二部分语言运用
专题13完形填空夹叙夹议文(原题版)_03高考英语_2025年新高考资料_二轮复习_2025年高考英语二轮热点题型归纳与变式演练(新高考通用)340016860_第二部分语言运用

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专题 13 完形填空夹叙夹议文 目录 题型综述 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 解题攻略 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 题型 01 句内层次题 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 题型 02 句组层次题 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 题型 03 语篇层次题 高考练场 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7  题型简介夹叙夹议文是高考英语完形填空中常见的一种体裁。它结合了记叙文和议论文的特点,通常通过叙述一 个事件或经历,然后在此基础上发表作者的观点或引发思考。这种文体的文章结构清晰,主题明确,内 容贴近考生的生活实际,具有较强的可读性和教育意义。  命题类型  句内层次题:主要考查动词、名词、形容词和副词等实词在具体语境中的运用。  句组理解题:要求考生根据上下文的语境来选择最合适的词汇,理解作者的观点和态度。  语篇推理题:考查考生对文章逻辑关系的理解,需要根据文章的叙述和议论部分进行推理。  解题思路  关注首句,领会大意:首句通常不设空,提供了文章的主题或背景信息,帮助考生快速把握文章的 大意。  注重语境,理清行文逻辑:夹叙夹议文的记叙和议论部分交错出现,考生需要通过上下文的语境来 理解作者的观点和态度。  找准标志词,弄清结构:注意文章中的衔接词,如对比、强调、让步、举例等,这些词可以帮助考 生理解文章的结构和发展脉络。  先易后难,逐步推进:先解决那些容易判断的空格,再逐步处理较难的题目,避免在难题上耗费过 多时间。  复读再核查:在填完所有空格后,通读全文,确保所选答案使文章意思通顺、前后连贯。 题型01 句内层次题(安徽省卓越县中联盟2024-2025学年高三上学期11月期中考试) ......... Helen was only ____30____ to work a few days a week, but that soon turned into every day. This lovely 78- year-old woman loved coming to school. She always felt quite ____31____ when I told her not to come on extremely cold and icy mornings. ......... 30. A. forced B. scheduled C. trained D. permitted 31. A. surprised B. fortunate C. ashamed D. disappointed (2024年浙江卷1月完形填空片段) My new friend spoke virtually no English, so I happily took the ____24____ to practice my Chinese. 24. A. chance B. advice C. trouble D. right句内层次题 题型02 句组层次题 (湖北省市级示范高中智学联盟2024-2025学年高三上学期12月月考) ........ As someone who doesn’t like being in the spotlight (聚光灯), ___45___ down the street and suddenly hearing someone say to their friend, “Look, a laowai”, is not the most enjoyable experience. It’s safe to say that most people wouldn’t ___46___ a stranger commenting out loud on their ___47___, like saying “tall guy” or “big head”. ........ 45. A. running B. walking C. riding D. driving 46. A. avoid B. rely C. permit D. appreciate 47. A. background B. attitude C. appearance D. behavior(2024年1月浙江省高考首考) While taking a 20-hour train ride along the edge of the Taklimakan Desert in northwestern China, I had the kind of humbling, educational, and above all else, wonderful ____21.encounter____ with a local that all travelers long for. A young Chinese man ____22____ me on the train. My ____23____ friend spoke virtually no English, so I happily took the ____24.chance____ to practice my Chinese. 22. A. treated B. saved C. lectured D. approached 23. A. true B. so-called C. new D. long-lost 题型03 语篇层次题 (2024·江苏南京·模拟预测) In 2014, Amy collapsed from a brain hemorrhage (脑溢血) while working. After a year recovering at home, she sighed up for a course with the ambition to become a 2 . However, occasional vision disturbance was still presen , influencing the amount of energy she could give to the course. Further complications (并发症) left the young artist almost completely blind, making it difficult to see a whole figure. It’s particularly depressing because it seemed to ruined her optimism to be a painter! 2.A.teacher B.doctor C.worker D.painter (2021年浙江1月高考完形填空片段) I was sent to the Coronado National Forest for my first 8-day 42 .We had to 43.carry everything we needed and walk three miles to where we worked.It may not seem like a 44.long way but in 35 heat and with a heavy pack, my legs were on fire. ℃ My job was to 45.build a stairway out of rock.This 46.meant climbing up and down the side of a mountaininhabited (栖息) by mountain lions, although I should say they were only heard, never 47.seen. … 53.Needless to say,I suffered a lot.But I know whatever I have to face in my life I was there and I 54.survived.I think I am much 55.stronger for having taken part in the project. 42.A.tour B.project C.campaign D.Course (2024年新课标高考英语甲卷) One day, we had a family dinner. While the adults were busy with their serious talk outside, I was left alone in the ____21____ to help my grandmother wash dishes. ____22____ my grandmother would tell me stories about her childhood. Born just before WWII, my grandmother ____23____ an entirely different childhood lifestyle from mine. She did not have a chance to go to ____24____. Like in typical families, where boys were ____25____ much more than girls, my grandma had to stay at home to do ____26____. The only opportunity (机会) she could seize to ____27____ was when her brother was having Chinese ____28____ with the family tutor. She would sit quietly at the far end of the long dinner table, listening ____29____. This training taught her to read and write her Chinese upside down — a skill that has turned out to be quite ____30____, especially whenever we share the newspaper. On most weekends, my grandmother, a young girl then, and her brother would go to the ____31____. There, they would walk through deep water, sit down cross-legged underwater and hold their ____32____ while they watched all action going on around them. This is something I ____33____ — her ability to open her ____34____ underwater and still sit comfortably on the seabed. My childhood is quite ____35____ compared with hers. I am ____36____ that I did not need to ____37____ the hardships like she did. I've never faced the problem of ____38____. I guess our different childhood background is what makes my grandmother such an amazing person to ____39____ to: her stories always make my history textbooks ____40____. 21. A. sitting room B. kitchen C. yard D. dining hall 22. A. As always B. By the way C. For example D. Here and now 23. A. adjusted B. promoted C. achieved D. experienced 24. A. work B. school C. court D. press 25. A. favored B. tolerated C. trusted D. acknowledged 26. A. gardening B. homework C. business D. housework 27. A. exercise B. study C. explore D. teach 28. A. food B. guests C. lessons D. tea 29. A. closely B. directly C. nervously D. freely 30. A. professional B. awkward C. simple D. practical 31. A. market B. mountain C. beach D. class 32. A. secret B. breath C. view D. tongue 33. A. admire B. notice C. adopt D. value34. A. hands B. mouth C. eyes D. arms 35. A. difficult B. complex C. happy D. similar 36. A. grateful B. surprised C. convinced D. regretful 37. A. reflect upon B. go through C. ask about D. prepare for 38. A. unemployment B. health C. education D. communication 39. A. attend B. refer C. lead D. talk 40. A. come true B. come round C. come out D. come alive (2023年1月浙江首考) The sun was beginning to sink as I set off into the Harenna Forest. I was on my way to 41 a unique honey harvest. Here, in south-east Ethiopia, hand-carved beehives(蜂箱)are placed in the 42 . Reaching them to get the honey is difficult—and often 43 . I 44 beekeeper Ziyad over a wide stretch of grassland before entering a thick jungle. Ziyad began preparations. He 45 handfuls of damp tree leaves, wrapped them with string, and 46 the bunch to create a torch(火把). Then, with one end of a rope tied to his waist and the other end around the trunk of a tree, Ziyad began 47 . He stopped every few minutes to move the 48 higher up the tree trunk. 49 , Ziyad got close to the hive which was around 20 metres above the ground. Sitting on a branch, he 50 towards it and blew smoke from his torch into a tiny hole in the hive. Suddenly, Ziyad let out a sharp cry. Within seconds, he’d 51 the trunk and was back on the ground. It was too 52 to collect the honey. A cool summer had delayed 53 . Baby bees were still in the honeycombs(蜂巢). The adult bees were 54 and kept attacking as Ziyad escaped from the tree. He had to wait for the right 55 to go back up. 41.A.share B.collect C.celebrate D.witness 42.A.courtyards B.fields C.treetops D.caves 43.A.urgent B.dangerous C.expensive D.pointless 44.A.searched B.recognised C.followed D.invited 45.A.gathered B.cleaned C.dropped D.checked 46.A.shook B.lit C.measured D.decorated 47.A.jumping B.talking C.testing D.climbing 48.A.hives B.leaves C.rope D.honey 49.A.Finally B.Surprisingly C.Naturally D.Immediately 50.A.backed B.dived C.shouted D.inched 51.A.cut off B.gone up C.slid down D.held onto 52.A.high B.early C.fast D.close 53.A.hatching B.training C.sowing D.trading 54.A.curious B.hungry C.bored D.angry 55.A.moment B.equipment C.person D.orderA (24-25高三上·海南省直辖县级单位·阶段练习)I went on holiday recently and didn’t take a single photo. That was not because it wasn’t an “Instagram able location” or because I wasn’t having a good time. In fact, not taking photos wasn’t even a(n) 1 decision, at least at first. Not having to 2 getting “the perfect shot” was relaxing. The two weeks of holiday were spent being truly in the moment. The exhaustion of trying to capture every single sunset, meal and pool shot 3 . Not snapping away like crazy saved me 4 to actually enjoy every moment. It made for a more 5 experience. I wasn’t constantly distracted by angles, lighting and filters (滤镜). I simply absorbed what was happening in front of me. The irony (讽刺之处) is that most people take a picture in order to keep a memory 6 . Nevertheless, psychologists say you’re actually rewriting over that memory by doing so. Linda Henkel, a psychology professor at Fairfield University, conducted a study in 2014 with 28 university students. These students were asked to observe 15 objects with their own 7 and snap photos of 15 others in a museum. When they were tested the next day, they weren’t able to remember as many features of the objects that they had 8 compared with those they had seen with their eyes. Henkel found that taking photos led to an “impairment effect.” That is to say, the subjects remembered fewer 9 of an experience. “As soon as you hit ‘click’ on that camera, it’s as if you’ve outsourced (外包) your memory,” she says. “We have this expectation that the camera is going to remember things for us, so we don’t have to continue 10 that object and we don’t engage in the types of things that would otherwise help us to remember it.” With smartphones and devices that automatically (自动地) take a picture every 30 seconds, how much is too much? How do we know when we are taking too many pictures and 11 our memories? 12 most of us are taking more photos than we can handle. Who among us hasn’t regularly wondered what to do with our smartphone photos and struggled to 13 old ones to clear out storage space? We’ve already been told that Instagramming food makes meals taste 14 . Perhaps that’s why I ate such delicious food on my recent two-week holiday. As 15 as it may be to snap away to my heart’s content, I think I’m going to start putting the phone down more often in order to actually enjoy the time with my loved ones instead. 1.A.final B.right C.intentional D.tough 2.A.stop with B.focus on C.benefit from D.fight for 3.A.moved up B.ran down C.went out D.fell away 4.A.time B.money C.space D.need 5.A.exciting B.carefree C.professional D.useful 6.A.sate B.correct C.alive D.available 7.A.efforts B.opinions C.strengths D.eyes 8.A.photographed B.observed C.discovered D.expected 9.A.mistakes B.details C.changes D.challenges 10.A.processing B.discussing C.solving D.improving11.A.connecting B.changing C.strengthening D.sacrificing 12.A.Unfortunately B.Thankfully C.Surprisingly D.Obviously 13.A.compare B.delete C.replace D.collect 14.A.familiar B.similar C.worse D.unusual 15.A.attractive B.normal C.silly D.rewarding B (24-25 高三上·山东·阶段练习)As a graduate student in Chicago, Andria was given the much exhausting job of collecting survey data as part of an academic research project. Each time she approached a passer-by, she thought she would be told how annoyed they were. Yet the bad responses 16 came. Many more people were 17 to answer the questionnaires than she had 18 . Was it possible, she wondered, that most of us are wrong about whether people want to respond to our requests? Over the following decade, she conducted multiple studies that 19 this was indeed the case: under many circumstances, people are often more likely to 20 than we assume. 21 , it seemed that the results provided a refreshingly 22 view of human nature. “It is 23 to know that people are more likely to do things for you than expected.” However, with time going by and more reflections on the results, Andria has come to 24 that her results reflect a broader tendency that we usually 25 how much influence our words can have on others, whether we’re asking them to 26 good or bad actions. People often agree to do what they are asked because they find it too 27 to say no, even sometimes feeling uncomfortable with our 28 . Knowing this can help us understand how our demands might 29 other people particularly in the workplace, helping us adjust our needs accordingly in ways that respect people’s 30 and without taking what they have done for us for granted. 16.A.frequently B.eventually C.rarely D.tentatively 17.A.reluctant B.ready C.accessible D.hesitant 18.A.recognized B.transferred C.committed D.anticipated 19.A.made for B.marked out C.made out D.made sure 20.A.ignore B.cooperate C.reject D.complain 21.A.On the surface B.On the whole C.On the contrary D.On the go 22.A.neutral B.critical C.negative D.optimistic 23.A.ridiculous B.awesome C.discouraging D.influential 24.A.deny B.doubt C.appreciate D.subscribe 25.A.undervalue B.overstate C.mislead D.correlate 26.A.imitate B.perceive C.measure D.perform 27.A.awkward B.deliberate C.tricky D.amused 28.A.recommendations B.requests C.quests D.announcements 29.A.distinguish B.impress C.emerge D.impact 30.A.defense B.assumptions C.boundaries D.confusionC (24-25高三上·四川成都·阶段练习)The past 10 months has been the most influential months of my life. As a junior, I left my comfortable home in Illinois and 31 going to the Navajo Indian Reservation in Arizona. There I attended a local poorly-equipped school and 32 for an adventure. I experienced so many 33 when I arrived, fighting each day to 34 in a new social environment—overcoming racial differences, handling social 35 ... During the summer vacation I 36 to be a counselor (顾问) at an Easter Seals camp for people with 37 needs who require assistance because of disabilities and improve their ability to do things alone. It was the most tiring work I’d ever experienced but the most 38 . I knew that I’d helped improve over 850 campers’ 39 . As the new school year began, our department had a renovation (翻新). I offered to help clean up all the 40 books. Instead of recycling hundreds of those books, I 41 the department that the books could serve a higher 42 . This simple act resulted in an all-out book drive benefiting the schools in Arizona. The 10-month experience in Arizona 43 me greatly. It made me become a person with patience, appreciation, determination, and 44 enthusiasm. I trust that it is through enthusiasm, ideas and action that all changes can 45 . 31.A.practised B.risked C.escaped D.considered 32.A.settled on B.settled for C.settled up D.settled in 33.A.miracles B.pleasures C.blows D.burdens 34.A.survive B.succeed C.recover D.return 35.A.relationships B.communications C.conflicts D.responsibilities 36.A.promises B.determined C.afforded D.learned 37.A.essential B.normal C.special D.natural 38.A.challenging B.rewarding C.demanding D.appealing 39.A.patience B.independence C.intelligence D.confidence 40.A.unturned B.invaluable C.unbeneficial D.unwanted 41.A.reminded B.comforted C.informed D.convinced 42.A.attempt B.target C.purpose D.standard 43.A.transformed B.enlightened C.educated D.impressed 44.A.after all B.above all C.at all D.in all 45.A.work B.spread C.matter D.occur D (24-25高三上·广西·阶段练习)Learning to draw is challenging, and finding effective practice methods can be even harder. Repetition is crucial, but it shouldn’t kill the joy of 46 . I had been self-teaching for yearswith 47 progress, despite having tried lots of books and courses and filled endless pages with boxes, parallel 48 and figures. But something 49 when I started sketchbooking (速描) this year. The sketchbooks led to a shift in mindset. Rather than trying to practice as before, I was engaging in scribbling (乱涂乱画). I started carrying sketchbooks 50 , capturing scenes and moments. These books became an essential part of my experiences and a way for me to work through stuff, especially during 51 times when my wife had a health scare and was in the hospital. I spoke with Danny Gregory, a sketchbooking enthusiast, to try to 52 why I had become so taken by my new passion. He 53 that traditional drawing practice feels academic and unexpressive. Instead, he advocated for expressive, repetitive, and focused practice, like 54 a sketchbook with drawings of a morning tea cup. Inspired, I completed two sketchbooks full of portraits, not as studies for future work, but as individual 55 . My current sketchbook tackles my biggest challenge—drawing 56 . Now I’m not 57 it as I did before because drawing a bunch of hands isn’t just practice anymore. Sketchbooking has become an 58 part of my life. It has allowed me to 59 moments and work through emotions, making the act of drawing not just a 60 to master but a form of personal expression and therapy. 46.A.teaching B.learning C.reading D.writing 47.A.little B.rapid C.steady D.significant 48.A.waves B.edges C.lines D.dots 49.A.clicked B.worsened C.developed D.remained 50.A.nowhere B.everywhere C.anywhere D.somewhere 51.A.dull B.easy C.ordinary D.difficult 52.A.figure out B.sort out C.turn out D.hand out 53.A.refused B.insisted C.explained D.promised 54.A.starting B.filling C.sharing D.buying 55.A.drafts B.plans C.expressions D.copies 56.A.animals B.hands C.heads D.figures 57.A.fearing B.ignoring C.criticizing D.praising 58.A.adaptable B.unacceptable C.awkward D.enjoyable 59.A.capture B.release C.interpret D.avoid 60.A.way B.hobby C.game D.skill